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FCC Announces Plan To Repeal Net Neutrality (nytimes.com)

FCC on Tuesday said it plans to dismantle landmark regulations that ensure equal access to the internet, clearing the way for companies to charge more and block access to some websites. From a report on the New York Times: The proposal, put forward by the F.C.C. chairman, Ajit Pai, is a sweeping repeal of rules put in place by the Obama administration that prohibited high-speed internet service providers from blocking or slowing down the delivery of websites, or charging extra fees for the best quality of streaming and other internet services for their subscribers. The clear winners from the move would be telecom giants like AT&T and Comcast that have lobbied for years against regulations of broadband and will now have more control over the online experiences of American consumers. The losers could be internet sites that will have to answer to telecom firms to get their content in front of consumers. And consumers may see their bills increase for the best quality of internet service. Note from the editor: the aforementioned link could be paywalled; consider the alternative sources: NPR, ArsTechnica, Associated Press, BBC, Axios, Reuters, TechCrunch, and Slate.

FTC Commissioner Terrell McSweeny criticized the move. She said, "So many things wrong here, like even if FCC does this FTC still won't have jurisdiction. But even if we did, most discriminatory conduct by ISPs will be perfectly legal. This won't hurt tech titans with deep pockets. They can afford to pay all the trolls under the bridge. But the entrepreneurs and innovators who truly make the Internet great won't be so lucky. It will be harder for them to compete. The FCC is upending the Internet as we know it, not saving it."

This is what the internet looks like when there is no net neutrality. Earlier today, news outlet Motherboard suggested we should build our own internet if we want to safeguard the essence of open internet.
In a statement, EFF said: It is worth reflecting on just how wildly unsupported by the public and wrong the FCC is on its effort to end an Open Internet. More than 1000 small businesses, investors, and technology startups in all 50 states have publicly opposed the proposal. More than 900 online video creators that produce content for more than 240 million viewers oppose the FCC plan. Over 200 international businesses and organizations have weighed in opposition. Fifty-two racial justice, civil rights, and human rights organizations have filed in support of the current rules. Dozens of ISPs across the country have told the FCC to leave the rules in place. Libraries, around 120,000 in total, from across the United States support retaining the Open Internet Order. Privacy organizations have told the FCC that its proposal would further degrade broadband user privacy and therefore oppose the proposal. State Attorneys General from Illinois, California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine and Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Oregon, Vermont, Washington and DC support retaining the existing consumer protections. Sixty Mayors across the country have filed their opposition to the FCC plan. The National Association of Realtors expressed their support for keeping a legally enforceable Open Internet rule. And 1.52 million unique comments (as in people navigating the cumbersome FCC website directly to submit a statement rather than use a form letter website) were submitted in support of Title II and Network Neutrality versus only 23,000 supporting the FCC. A recent poll has found that 77 percent of Americans support retaining the current Network Neutrality rules (the poll broke it down to 73 percent of Republican voters, 80 percent of Democratic voters, and 76 percent of independents). The numbers are even higher when Americans are asked whether they support privacy protections, such as requiring ISPs to obtain consent from users before monetizing with third parties (85 percent Republicans, 82 percent Democrats, and 78 percent independents). So if the public and virtually every facet of Internet culture (including ISPs) oppose the FCC's plan, then why are we even going down this path? To put it simply: the FCC is not serving the public interest, but rather is serving the interests of the very few but massive vertically integrated ISPs that support the current agency's agenda.

18 of 331 comments (clear)

  1. Paywalled by 110010001000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article saying that Net Neutrality is going to be dismantled is behind a paywall. This is the Internet 2017.

    1. Re: Paywalled by Gorobei · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Net neutrality has nothing to do with moderation.

      You browse at -1, you get to ignore the moderation you don't seem to like. All comments are still treated equally in terms of you getting to see them. That's net neutrality.

      If Slashdot starts charging money to transmit left-leaning comments, or reduces the bandwidth given to right-wing comments, that's non-neutral.

      Really, it is not strange to be pro-net neutrality in a world where carriers are both bandwidth providers and content producers.

  2. and so i announce my plan to prioritize traffic. by nimbius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In light of this tremendous achievement by Chairman Pai, I and many other Slashdotters will now begin the efficient and productive streamlining of our internet traffic so as to prioritize content and improve the internet experience.
    These improvements include:

    1: null-routing all known advertisement servers.
    2: implementing our own caching DNS to avoid SRVFAIL redirection.
    3: Installation of noscript, adblock, ssl everywhere and other script and advertising element blocking extensions to our browsers.
    4: implementing open source VPN technology in our home networks
    5: returning our wireless routers -- which are used by many providers to advertise public SSID's for other network subscribers to use -- and implementing secured open-source solutions.

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    Good people go to bed earlier.
  3. Re:Government should protect citizens from abuse. by ne1av1cr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well you need to put those in place before we get rid of the Title 2 protections.

  4. It won't happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As long as we have "news" outlets like Fox News misinforming people and people not willing to be skeptical, and the Republicans using Fox News to their advantage, we will continue to have this crap.

    The tax bill that was passed by the House will screw us in the end (except if you are a 1+ percenter) and the Senate's isn't looking much better.

    How did those people get elected? Because about half of our population believes in the non-sense that's spoon fed to them or vote on single (distraction) issues.

  5. Re:Net Neutrality is Actually Bad by Nidi62 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This will allow ISP's to increase their revenue and use that money to improve and expand their infrastructure.

    Haven't we been giving them millions in payments and tax breaks for years to do that very thing? Hasn't happened yet.

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    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
  6. Re:A Win-Win Scenario! by TheCastro1689 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Comcast already tiers my internet and I pay for the Blast! one or whatever which has artificial boosts. I don't see a big difference here.

  7. Re:We need to talk about the ECONOMICS by ArhcAngel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    AT&T, Comcast and Verizon have government rights of way that are not granted to others. This gives them an unfair advantage and control of who gets to play in what markets. They have continually fought third party access to their sites and when they are forced to grant right of way to third parties they deliberately make the process slow and unmanageable to discourage (sabotage) their competition. Take away those rights and I would be able to get behind your argument. Until then government controls need to be in place since government rights have been granted.

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    "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
  8. Have you ever actually read Orwell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The irony is that you are quoting Orwell but apparently have never actually READ Orwell, because his whole thesis is about the dangers of GOVERNMENT. Using Orwell to argue for more government is literally the 180 degree opposite of logic.

    1. Re: Have you ever actually read Orwell? by Puls4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is a load of horseshit.

      You know why LCD's where so expensive for so long? Because those same companies in 'free' competition agreed to jack the prices up. You CANNOT TRUST companies looking for profits to do anything with the interest of the consumer in mind. The sort of statement you're making is the same one Ajit P has made about the internet. And it's a complete lie.

    2. Re:Have you ever actually read Orwell? by greythax · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, I HAVE read it, and man did you REALLY take away the wrong lesson. His central thesis wasn't that government is bad, so be an anarchist. The dangers he lays out, very clearly, are ignorance, apathy, and cowardice in the face of growing injustice. GP interprets it far more accurately than you do. Ingsoc used doublespeak and paranoia to turn ITS PEOPLE against each other. Buying into this blind "government is bad" and "protecting innovation" is the very definition of being an Orwellian character.

  9. Re:Best chance at reversal of this in the near fut by bjdevil66 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ajit Pai (and his GOP-appointed counterpart) had their minds made up years ago, and his doggedly stubborn position feels like it's based in ideology instead of the facts presented by his opponents.

    Just compare this PBS.org interview where Mr. Pai used the same selective dodging of the facts pointed out by NN advocates (especially John Oliver's piece on the subject back in the day) that don't support his point of view. Then watch John Oliver's simplistic but factually correct episodes from 2014 and 2017 - Part One and 2017 - Part Two on the issue.

    Either John Oliver (and his writing/research staff) or Ajit Pai is an outright liar about this issue. Any bets on who's the fibber? It's either a left-leaning comedian, or a former Verizon Wireless lawyer. (TIP: Don't bet the farm on this being a bad John Oliver joke...)

  10. Re:More government in your internet = China by sdinfoserv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just like building codes regulate that structures should be able to withstand earthquakes in earthquake zones, and that public buildings need fire escapes, and that you just can't dump garbage into rivers, lakes and streams, etc.
    So, yes, in that regard, most believe it's Government's job to setup protections - since corporations have shown time after time they put profit over safety or human life.
    It this case, Net Neutrality tells ISP's they CAN NOT sell your personal surfing behavior or prioritize one source over another. Without NN your ISP will be able to sell you not only the connection, but also a "bundle" where if you don't pay for the "sports bundle", your ESPN will crawl, or if you don't purchase the "entertainment" bundle, Netflix / Hulu or Amazon Prime will be too slow to stream in HiDef. Remember, you are already paying for the connection (which is the DEFINITION of ISP), and you've likely had data caps put in place over the past year or two. Repealing NN is nothing more than an estimate $8 BILLION hand over to ISP's with ZERO consumer benefit, reduced protections and increased cost.
    As far as "choice", most cable companies have used laws to ensure nobody else can compete in their market. I live in Seattle... My "choice" is Comast or DSL with Frontier... Ya, some choice.
    This just epitomizes why consumer protections are necessary and proves the our government is actually an oligarchy.

  11. Re:Meh by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What "next democratic administration"?

    Websites run by critics of the current administration will simply fail to load. From now on the Republican Party is the only party.

  12. Impact on the Citizens United decision by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Insightful
    When the Citizens United decision was handed down by the Supreme Court, this was written by Justice Kennedy in the majority opinion:

    "With the advent of the Internet, prompt disclosure of expenditures can provide shareholders and citizens with the information needed to hold corporations and elected officials accountable for their positions and supporters."

    And now these same corporations have been given the freedom to control what you can see on the Internet.

    Oops!

  13. Re:NN isn't the issue, competition is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Equality sounds nice unless you understand how Soviet and grim "equality" can get. I don't want equality. I want choices and excellence.

    The US education system has failed you and the rest of your compatriots. Choices and excellence do not spring up by magic in any type of market. Regulation is needed for that, we can debate to what extent but not the if. Without regulation all you get is freedom to get fucked in the ass by the corporations.

  14. Re:Best chance at reversal of this in the near fut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Please try to keep in mind that virtually everything you ever loved or hated about the internet came about in the total absence of these so-called net neutrality rules.

    That's because the internet largely operated based on neutrality principles until recently, when some companies started "innovating".

    We need the rules now to enforce the status quo of the last several decades.

    Basically, we didn't need rules until people started stepping out of line. They're stepping now, so they need to be put back in line ASAP.

  15. Re:Repeal of *2015* FCC Title II you mean ? by EndlessNameless · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Rules that even the Obama appointed FCC chairman said were overreaching and would stiffle Internet growth

    Except for the part where Wheeler's rules included built-in exemptions for the parts he thought were too demanding or inappropriate for the internet.

    What more do you want the guy to do? He fine-tuned the rules to exactly the level he wanted. Net neutrality advocates didn't get everything they wanted, but it was enough to prevent serious abuses.

    But sure, take his words and rules completely out of context if that's what you need to be right.

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    According to the latest ruleset, this post should be modded as Vorpal Flamebait +5.